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Alkenes palladation

As in the palladium(II)-catalysed indole annulation, a diastereomerically pure substrate was designed to help elucidate the mechanism of the benzofuran and dihydrobenzo-furan syntheses (Scheme 9.21). When aryl allyl ether 163 was treated with the palladium oxidation catalyst, dihydrobenzofuran 164 was produced as an exclusive di-astereomer in 60% yield. This observation confirmed that an oxidative Heck reaction pathway, featuring arene palladation, alkene insertion and /3-hydride elimination, was operative. [Pg.374]

The Pd—C cr-bond can be prepared from simple, unoxidized alkenes and aromatic compounds by the reaction of Pd(II) compounds. The following are typical examples. The first step of the reaction of a simple alkene with Pd(ll) and a nucleophile X or Y to form 19 is called palladation. Depending on the nucleophile, it is called oxypalladation, aminopalladation, carbopalladation, etc. The subsequent elimination of b-hydrogen produces the nucleophilic substitution product 20. The displacement of Pd with another nucleophile (X) affords the nucleophilic addition product 21 (see Chapter 3, Section 2). As an example, the oxypalladation of 4-pentenol with PdXi to afford furan 22 or 23 is shown. [Pg.13]

Palladation of aromatic compounds with Pd(OAc)2 gives the arylpalladium acetate 25 as an unstable intermediate (see Chapter 3, Section 5). A similar complex 26 is formed by the transmetallation of PdX2 with arylmetal compounds of main group metals such as Hg Those intermediates which have the Pd—C cr-bonds react with nucleophiles or undergo alkene insertion to give oxidized products and Pd(0) as shown below. Hence, these reactions proceed by consuming stoichiometric amounts of Pd(II) compounds, which are reduced to the Pd(0) state. Sometimes, but not always, the reduced Pd(0) is reoxidized in situ to the Pd(II) state. In such a case, the whole oxidation process becomes a catalytic cycle with regard to the Pd(II) compounds. This catalytic reaction is different mechanistically, however, from the Pd(0)-catalyzed reactions described in the next section. These stoichiometric and catalytic reactions are treated in Chapter 3. [Pg.14]

Pd(II) compounds coordinate to alkenes to form rr-complexes. Roughly, a decrease in the electron density of alkenes by coordination to electrophilic Pd(II) permits attack by various nucleophiles on the coordinated alkenes. In contrast, electrophilic attack is commonly observed with uncomplexed alkenes. The attack of nucleophiles with concomitant formation of a carbon-palladium r-bond 1 is called the palladation of alkenes. This reaction is similar to the mercuration reaction. However, unlike the mercuration products, which are stable and isolable, the product 1 of the palladation is usually unstable and undergoes rapid decomposition. The palladation reaction is followed by two reactions. The elimination of H—Pd—Cl from 1 to form vinyl compounds 2 is one reaction path, resulting in nucleophilic substitution of the olefinic proton. When the displacement of the Pd in 1 with another nucleophile takes place, the nucleophilic addition of alkenes occurs to give 3. Depending on the reactants and conditions, either nucleophilic substitution of alkenes or nucleophilic addition to alkenes takes place. [Pg.21]

In the prostaglandin synthesis shown, silyl enol ether 216, after transmetaJ-lation with Pd(II), undergoes tandem intramolecular and intermolecular alkene insertions to yield 217[205], It should be noted that a different mechanism (palladation of the alkene, rather than palladium enolate formation) has been proposed for this reaction, because the corresponding alkyl enol ethers, instead of the silyl ethers, undergo a similar cyclization[20I],... [Pg.50]

Mechanistic studies show that the arylation of alkenes proceeds via the palladation of aromatic compounds to form a rr-aryl-Pd bond (261), into which insertion of alkene takes place to form 262. The final step is i3-elimina-tion to form the arylated alkenes 259 and Pd(0). [Pg.56]

Three oxidative reactions of benzene with Pd(OAc)2 via reactive rr-aryl-Pd complexes are known. The insertion of alkenes and elimination afford arylalk-enes. The oxidative functionalization of alkenes with aromatics is treated in Section 2.8. Two other reactions, oxidative homocoupling[324,325] and the acetoxylation[326], are treated in this section. The palladation of aromatic compounds is possible only with Pd(OAc)2. No reaction takes place with PdCl2. [Pg.74]

The transmetallation of various organometallic compounds (Hg, Tl, Sn, B, Si, etc.) with Pd(II) generates the reactive cr-aryl, alkenyl, and alkyl Pd compounds. These carbopalladation products can be used without isolation for further reactions. Pd(II) and Hg(II) salts have similar reactivity toward alkenes and aromatic compounds, but Hg(II) salts form stable mercuration products with alkenes and aromatic rings. The mercuration products are isolated and handled easily. On the other hand, the corresponding palladation products are too reactive to be isolated. The stable mercuration products can be used for various reactions based on facile transmetallation with Pd(II) salts to generate the very reactive palladation products 399 and 400 in rim[364,365]. [Pg.79]

Palladation products formed from arylmercurials, carboalkoxymercurials, and alkylmercurials, which have no /3-hydrogen, are used in situ for the reaction of alkenes[367]. Particularly, the arylation of alkenes is synthetically useful. Styrene derivatives 402 and 403 are formed by the reaction of a... [Pg.79]

Stereochemical features in the oxidative addition and the elimination of /3-hydrogen of cyclic and acyclic alkenes are different. The insertion (palladation) is syn addition. The syn addition (carbopalladation) of R—Pd—X to an acyclic alkene is followed by the syn elimination of 3-hydrogen to give the trans-a ksne 6, because free rotation of 5 is possible with the acyclic alkene. On the other hand, no rotation of the intermediate 7 is possible with a cyclic alkene and the syn elimination of /3-hydrogen gives the allylic compound 8 rather than a substituted alkene. [Pg.128]

Butyrolactones are prepared by intramolecular reaction of haloallylic 2-alkynoates. The a-chloromethylenebutyrolactone 301 is prepared by the intramolecular reaction of300[150,151]. 4 -Hydroxy-2 -alkenyl 2-alkynoates can be used instead of haloallylic 2-alkynoates, and in this reaction, Pd(II) is regenerated by elimination of the hydroxy group[152]. As a related reaction, the q-(chloromethylene)-7-butyrolactone 304 is obtained from the cinnamyl 2-alkynoate 302 in the presence of LiCl and CuCbflSS]. Isohinokinin (305) has been synthesized by this reaction[l 54]. The reaction is explained by chloro-palladation of the triple bond, followed by intramolecular alkene insertion to generate the alkylpalladium chloride 303. Then PdCb is regenerated by attack of CuCb on the alkylpalladium bond as a key step in the catalytic reaction. [Pg.505]

Palladium(0)-catalyzed cross-coupling of aryl halides and alkenes (i.e., the Heck reaction) is widely used in organic chemistry. Oxidative Heck reactions can be achieved by forming the Pd -aryl intermediate via direct palladation of an arene C - H bond. Intramolecular reactions of this type were described in Sect. 4.1.2, but considerable effort has also been directed toward the development of intermolecular reactions. Early examples by Fu-jiwara and others used organic peroxides and related oxidants to promote catalytic turnover [182-184]. This section will highlight several recent examples that use BQ or dioxygen as the stoichiometric oxidant. [Pg.103]

The direct palladation procedure is limited to substitution with aryl and heterocyclic groups. The met-allation is an electrophilic process and therefore does not work well with deactivated aromatics. When possible, mixtures of isomers may be obtained. Since the palladium salts employed for the metallation are moderately strong oxidizing agents, the reaction cannot be used with easily oxidizable alkenes or aromatics. The only effective method for making this procedure catalytic is to reoxidize the palladium in situ with oxygen under pressure an inconvenient and potentially dangerous procedure. [Pg.835]

Two mechanisms of reaction appear possible depending upon the reactants. Initial palladation of other the alkene or the arene may occur alkene palladation is proposed to occur initially in reactions of chlorinated alkenes.2-3 Alkenes without strongly electron-withdrawing chloride substituents and moderately reactive arenes generally react via an initial arene palladation, and the reaction takes the route shown in Scheme l.4... [Pg.836]

Several examples of the cyclization of indole derivatives with alkenic side chains in the 3-position have been reported.6 In these examples, palladium chloride in combination with silver tetrafluoroborate is the cyclizing agent. The palladium tetrafluoroborate, presumably formed, should be a very reactive palladating species and probably is the reason why these reactions proceed at room temperature, although the mechanism is not yet completely clear. These reactions were worked up reductively (by addition of sodium borohydride) in order to reduce the expected alkenic product or any relatively stable organopalladium complexes that may have been formed (equation 4).6... [Pg.836]

Catalytic oxy-palladation is an extremely useful method for the synthesis of functionalized THF and tetrahydropyran moieties. This reaction is brought about simply by treating a 1,4- or 1,5-hydroxy alkene with 0.1 mol-eq of Pd(II) salts and copper(I) chloride in DMF, with oxygen (equation 181)655. If this reaction is carried out in the presence of carbon monoxide in methanol, then an ester moiety is introduced into the product molecule (equation 182)656-658. If an alkene is introduced in place of the CO, then a tandem vinylation reaction also takes place (equation 183)659. [Pg.756]

Oxidative cross-coupling with alkenes is possible with Pd(OAc)2 [109], The reaction proceeds by the palladation of benzene to form phenylpalladium acetate (164), followed by alkene insertion and elimination of /1-hydrogen. Heteroaromatics such as furan and thiophene react more easily than benzene [109]. Stilbene (177) is formed by the reaction of benzene and styrene. The complex skeleton of paraberquamide 179 was obtained in 80% yield by the Pd(II)-promoted coupling of the indole ring with the double bond in 178, followed by reduction of the intermediate with NaBELt [110]. [Pg.440]

Cardenas, D. J. Echavarren, A. M. Selectivity in the aliphatic palladation of ketone hydra-zones. An example of Pd-promoted intramolecular addition of a N, N-dimethylhydrazone to an alkene. Organometattics 1995, 14, 4427— 4430. [Pg.308]


See other pages where Alkenes palladation is mentioned: [Pg.7]    [Pg.48]    [Pg.56]    [Pg.89]    [Pg.90]    [Pg.95]    [Pg.712]    [Pg.101]    [Pg.31]    [Pg.35]    [Pg.52]    [Pg.291]    [Pg.332]    [Pg.335]    [Pg.540]    [Pg.281]    [Pg.845]    [Pg.443]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.490 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.490 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.7 , Pg.490 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.7 , Pg.490 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.490 ]




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